Bounded Agent Autonomy
Bounded agent autonomy is the design stance that agents should have enough freedom to pursue goals, but only inside explicit limits for authority, uncertainty, reversibility, cost, risk, and escalation [src-088].
Key points
- Angus J. McLean's AI Engineer talk frames autonomy as a spectrum between free will and determinism rather than a binary switch [src-088].
- The operational question is not simply whether an agent can act, but whether it has the authority, confidence, context, and risk budget to act without escalation [src-088].
- Bounded autonomy pairs naturally with Decision Traceability for Agents because the system must record why it acted, deferred, or escalated [src-088].
- The pattern helps reconcile agentic speed with enterprise control: low-risk reversible actions can be automated, while high-cost or irreversible decisions require stronger evidence or human approval [src-088].
Related concepts
- Agent Security Boundaries
- Decision Traceability for Agents
- Enterprise Agent Governance
- Human-Agent Collaboration
- Agentic Engineering
Source references
- [src-088] AI Engineer late-May 2026 channel update (48 transcripts, 2026-05-15 to 2026-05-31)
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